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IAN S. CLEMENT is an attorney in the Princeton and Philadelphia offices of Wong Fleming, Attorneys at Law, where he focuses his practice on civil rights and commercial litigation in state and federal courts. Before becoming an attorney, Mr. Clement served as police officer with the City of Virginia Beach, Virginia and testified in federal court in §1983 cases following the 1989 "Greekfest Riot." As an attorney, Mr. Clement has previously served as a special deputy attorney general/assistant prosecutor, where he handled felony and capital appeals before the Superior Court and the Federal District Court of Appeals. Most recently, he has served as a deputy attorney general with the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice in the Casino Prosecutions Bureau. Mr. Clement earned his B.A. degree from Old Dominion University and his J.D. degree from Southern Methodist University, Dedman School of Law. He is admitted to practice in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania. Mr. Clement is a member of the Philadelphia (Labor and Employment and Minorities in the Profession committees) and the National (Corporate Counsel Section) bar associations, as well as the New Jersey and Garden State Bar associations. (Newark and Cherry Hill locations) WILLIAM T. CONNELL is a partner in the law firm Dwyer, Connell & Lisbona. Mr. Connell's early career included investigative work for the Commercial Union Assurance Companies, and he was a detective for the Essex County Prosecutor's Office from 1971 to 1977. He is a member of the American, New Jersey State, Essex County and Middlesex County bar associations, the Federal Bar Association, the Middlesex County Trial Lawyers Association, the Trial Attorneys of New Jersey Association, the New Jersey Defense Association and the Trucking Industry Defense Association. He holds the rank of Advocate in the American Board of Trial Advocates. He is indexed in the Who's Who in American Law. Since 1987, Mr. Connell has presided as the municipal judge of the Borough of Roseland. Mr. Connell was certified as a civil trial attorney by the New Jersey Supreme Court in 1982. He earned his B.A. degree from Providence College and his J.D. degree from Seton Hall University School of Law. (Newark location) ERIC J. MARCY is a shareholder with the law firm Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer P.A., where his areas of practice include class action litigation, criminal and civil litigation, federal and state civil rights litigation, and administrative law. He earned his B.A. degree, magna cum laude, from Boston College and his J.D. degree from Seton Hall University School of Law. Prior to joining Wilentz, Mr. Marcy served the State of New Jersey as a deputy attorney general in the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice, Department of Law and Public Safety, Office of the Attorney General in the Appellate and Trial sections (1982-1985). He has been a member of the New Jersey Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers since 1987. He served as a trustee of the NJ-ACDL from 2001 to 2010. He also served on the legislative committee and was instrumental in creating the association's website, serving as the website administrator. Most recently Mr. Marcy has been appointed to be a member of the New Jersey State Bar Association, Class Actions Committee for the 2010-2011 year. Mr. Marcy has served as a member of the Local Working Group on Electronic Technology in the District of New Jersey. He served as an instructor for the Institute of Continuing Legal Education Criminal Practice “Skills and Methods” program for newly admitted attorneys from 2000 to 2009. He also is an authorized attorney under the New Jersey State PBA Legal Protection Plan, representing law enforcement officers in administrative, civil and criminal matters. (Newark and Cherry Hill locations) KIMBERLEY M. WILSON is an assistant city attorney for the city of Trenton and has served in that role since 2006. She is admitted to practice before all state and federal courts in New Jersey. Since 2003, Ms. Wilson has worked either for New Jersey municipalities or law firms who represent them. Her work included land use, discrimination, Tort Claim Act, and federal and state civil rights defense. Her prior work has also included corporate, sports and employment law. Ms. Wilson received her B.A. degree in journalism and political science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and her J.D. degree from Washington & Lee University, where she was a Burks Scholar, teaching legal research and writing to first-year law students. Her article regarding the disparities in the federal sentencing guidelines on convictions involving powder cocaine and crack cocaine was published in 1995 in the Race & Ethnic Ancestry Law Digest. She was a law clerk for the Honorable Dennis J. Braithwaite, Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division. (Newark and Cherry Hill locations)
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